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Bishop Malone returns to Buffalo, avoids protesters at airport

The Bishop was accused of mishandling sex abuse in Maine before he was transferred to New York.

BUFFALO, N.Y. — When Bishop Richard Malone returned to Buffalo on Sunday evening after his visit to the Vatican, protesters and the media were waiting for him at the Buffalo airport.

He never encountered those protesters or our cameras. Instead, Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority (NFTA) officials whisked the bishop away, unseen, through a side door upon his arrival following a weeklong visit to the Vatican.

The NFTA provided a statement Sunday night:

As a matter of security and safety to our traveling public, measures were taken that are routine and common for high profile travelers. When there is the potential for a security issue at the airport, it is in the best interest of the public to do everything possible to avoid risk and or threats, Especially during the busy travels times.

The bishop's return to Western New York comes days after a report said Bishop Malone was on the verge of resigning.

The Diocese of Buffalo last week denied that report.

Christopher Lamb, the Rome correspondent for The Tablet, a Catholic international weekly publication, tweeted on the morning of November 13 that he heard from sources that Bishop Malone's resignation was in the hands of Pope Francis.

The next day Diocese spokesperson Kathy Spangler, speaking for the bishop, said the resignation tweet was "false." At the time, Spangler added that he would talk about his trip "next week."

Bishop Malone was in Rome for a weeklong "ad limina" visit to the Vatican, which ended on Friday with meeting among all the bishops from New York State and Pope Francis.

For much of the past two years, the Bishop has been under a near-constant barrage of criticism for his handling of the clergy sex abuse scandal within the Diocese.

Bishop Malone has consistently said he would not resign. He told 2 On Your Side investigative reporter Steve Brown that he plans to maintain his commitment to the Diocese unless the Pope asks him otherwise.

"I think that if in fact the Holy See, if the Vatican, were to do a review of the situation, something I would be very open to by the way," Bishop Malone said on September 18. "If the report came back from Rome that the Holy Father thought I should resign, then that’s, of course, something I would, out of obedience, do immediately."

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